Mexico
and the United States have signed three accords to improve bilateral
customs procedures and expedite the flow of agricultural produce
across their almost 2,000-mile (3,220 km) border, the two governments
said on Monday.
In
a joint news conference with US Homeland Security Secretary
Kirstjen Nielsen, Mexico’s Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray said the
first agreement aimed to promote joint cooperation to stop illegal
merchandise crossing the border.
The
two agreed to implement programs of joint inspections of cargo
between the neighbors, whose bilateral trade is worth half a trillion US dollars a year.
“It’s
about creating efficiencies,” Videgaray said.
Finally,
the governments signed an accord that would promote the trade of
agricultural goods, the minister added.
Nielsen
said the two countries were also working on about 20 further
memorandums of understanding and letters of intent.
Border security needs to be ramped up to halt the illicit flow
of arms, Mexico’s Interior Minister Alfonso Navarrete said in a
subsequent joint news conference with Nielsen.
“There
needs to be much more caution taken... to reduce gradually but
conclusively the high levels of violence when arms enter Mexico
illegally,” Navarrete added.
The
neighboring nations also need to share the responsibility of
attending to refugee and asylum cases, he said.
Mexican-US relations have been strained by US President Donald Trump’s
insistence that Mexico pay for the southern border wall he wants
built to keep out illegal immigrants.
Tensions
have also been stirred by Trump’s repeated threats to dump the
24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) if it is not
reworked to his satisfaction.
NAFTA
has encouraged companies to relocate to lower-cost Mexico at the
expense of US manufacturing workers, he argued.
In
January, Reuters reported that Mexico and the United States were
looking into whether armed US federal air marshals could be
deployed on commercial cross-border flights, the latest example of
Mexico seeking to ingratiate itself to its northern neighbor.
(Top photo: US Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen shakes hands with Mexico's Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray after delivering a joint message in Mexico City, Mexico, March 26, 2018.)
Source(s): Reuters